Abstract
Submicrometer-sized polystyrene-silica nanocomposite particles have been prepared by alcoholic dispersion polymerization of styrene using commercial alcoholic silica sols of 13 or 22 nm diameter as the sole stabilizing agent. The key to the formation of colloidally stable nanocomposite particles is the selection of a cationic azo initiator (use of nonionic or anionic initiators leads either to the formation of silica-stabilized polystyrene latex particles with very low silica contents or to the precipitation of polystyrene, respectively). Neither surface modification of the silica sol nor the addition of surfactant or polymeric stabilizers is required for successful nanocomposite syntheses. The purified polystyrene-silica nanocomposite particles have relatively narrow particle size distributions, with mean diameters ranging from 331 to 464 nm as judged by disk centrifuge photosedimentometry. Thermogravimetric analyses indicated mean silica contents of 13-26 wt. %, depending on the synthesis conditions. Calcination of the polystyrene-silica nanocomposite particles leads to the formation of hollow silica shells, which indicates a well-defined core-shell morphology for the original nanocomposite particles.
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